LOL they're complaining their B-52 fleet is outdated in 1979! If only they could know that over 40 years later and we still have no plans to retire the B-52 fleet!
@richarda9962 жыл бұрын
Thank your congress, they have not finished filling their pockets.
@johnrogan94202 жыл бұрын
Steve Martin with a fake arrow in his head makes as much sense as Schesinger...🇦🇷🦨💩🥶🦦💀
@AdamB122 жыл бұрын
The US has more of an interest of keeping the nuclear subs relevant. Especially since you could retaliate anywhere with them and be virtually undetectable if out to sea.
@raybensinger83832 жыл бұрын
Any yet us spends allmost a trillon every year on military not counting cia an pentagon spending thats what happens when gov is involved waste thef an massive profits to companys who donate to there reelection gig
@markwest19632 жыл бұрын
Because there is no need to retire the 52. It works as well as it ever has. Better now
@admiralbenbow5083 Жыл бұрын
Now I think I will watch Threads to cheer myself up...
@bobross38 Жыл бұрын
Bro I just saw threads and that makes this look like the Disney version fr 😅 didn’t cheer me up either
@NaughtyAelf Жыл бұрын
Oh, the lighthearted 'When the Wind Blows' is a lovely second feature to Threads
@blackpoolbootz2790 Жыл бұрын
The Day after, then the war game. Leave the best to last (threads) lol
@GaryCameron10 ай бұрын
You can follow up with "On the Beach". Can you believe we read this in high school?
@jimseibyl51409 ай бұрын
Yeah that will do it.
@georgetincher78592 жыл бұрын
Seeing that B-52 crew sitting there playing cards with one them drinking a Tab brought back memories of my childhood in the early 1980s. Tab soda was one of the nastiest concoctions I've ever had the misfortune of tasting. Good grief that stuff was horrible. Anyone else old enough to remember Tab?
@johnfawcett14642 жыл бұрын
I remember Tab, that was one of the nastiest drinks made
@luckynedpepper90302 жыл бұрын
I remember Tab and I agree it was bad.
@davidcole84482 жыл бұрын
I stopped drinking Coca-Cola twenty five years ago, every few years I'll try a couple of sips, let me tell you, stop drinking coke for a year and when you try a couple of sips you'll say to yourself this taste like shit !
@robertpayne27172 жыл бұрын
Yes
@lablackzed2 жыл бұрын
@@johnfawcett1464 Good for cleaning your car radiator of gunk.👍
@tomp8094 Жыл бұрын
I was a Minuteman II ICBM Crew Member during the height of the Cold War. We constantly trained, exercised and were evaluated on being ready to fight a nuclear war with the Soviet Union.
@alangee9789 Жыл бұрын
Thank You!
@thinbluelinefr888410 ай бұрын
Greetings from French army , you brave Sir! It's a difficult unit for me and i was in army too, a big responsability for a human. Have a possibility to launch with a key a nuclear weapon everywhere in the World ! My godness 😨😨
@WingDiamond8 ай бұрын
🫡
@jayantadas31928 ай бұрын
As far as I am concerned, all these characters on this movie are 'Psycho', they are concerned about US nuclear venerability, rather than creating ideas and pursuing for complete elimination of the nuclear arsenal from the planet Earth.
@tomp80948 ай бұрын
@@CaptainKipQ Yes - we would do what we were trained to do and fulfill our mission.
@DarronSanderson Жыл бұрын
A 2023 update of this documentary needs to be composed.
@Mhel20237 ай бұрын
There's already plenty of AI-narrated cartoony-charactered nuke scenarios out there
@gray58177 ай бұрын
It's called "Command and Control"
@davidkay73897 ай бұрын
Don't worry, 2024 will have a live action demonstration
@christophersermeno86317 ай бұрын
No it doesn't....Russia is not the USSR....stop your leftist chicken little fear mongering....😂😂
@spydude386 ай бұрын
The strike that takes place will a "Mostly peaceful" attack.
@russvoight11672 жыл бұрын
The general officer boarding the EC-135 Looking Glass was Brigadier General Clarence Autrey.He was 28th Bomb Wing commander at Ellsworth AFB SD while I was stationed there. The 2nd wing commander to arrive as a colonel and to leave as a one star
@Travis1.979 Жыл бұрын
i´d like to have a boss like that, a strong and calm man.
@josemoreno3334 Жыл бұрын
I served in the USAF as a telephone linesman from 1979 to 1995. I got a good taste of what the cold war was about when I was sent TDY to places like Alaska and then West-Germany. You can see how ready we where in case the Soviet Union would attack. I was TDY at Offutt AFB, SAC HQ , Watching the chaos on TV the events happening in Moscow and the start of the ending of the cold war. I never thought I would see it end. There still a chance WW III can happen with the events going on today. God Help Us. Watching this video brings back the fear I felt as well as others of what could happen at that period. I call my self a Cold War Veteran, No medals, Just gut's. Good video.
@thinbluelinefr888410 ай бұрын
Thank you for you services ! It was a depressive years ! Thank you Kennedy, Commander Arkipov in 1962, Thanks you Cnl Petrov and Thank you, you and you and your comrades for protect this World. I'm born in 1994 my generation has been save.
@sartainja7 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service in war that was worth winning.
@timmyp345 ай бұрын
I was a lineman for the county.
@thomasdillon77612 жыл бұрын
I was shown this film at Lowry Air Force base in 1985 it scared the s*** out of me.
@Mc.Garnagle2 жыл бұрын
I was in and out of Minuteman silos for over three years. It's still hard to believe our guys wouldn't have their birds in the air, even with a first strike. My silo would have most definitely been empty given the same timeframe.
@nucflashevent2 жыл бұрын
Indeed...I'm to understand "Minuteman" wasn't just a cool name in regard to the missiles? :P
@Mc.Garnagle2 жыл бұрын
@@nucflashevent It's definitely a cool name, and an appropriate one given its role in national defense. In my experience Missileerss call them "birds." We don't really use affectionate slang for our missiles because they are such a constant pain in the ass lol. It's not due to less than stellar quality because they are excellent. But keeping them ready to travel requires a lot of little things to monitor or tweak. But "Minuteman" is the specific name for the type of land based ICBM we currently have in service. Technically it's the LG-30G Minuteman III because it's the third iteration of the missile platform. Ever since the Titan ICBM was retired and the failure of the Peacekeeper, the name "Minuteman" has become something of a catch all. As of now t's the only game in town. The Russian Federation and China on the other hand deploy multiple types of land based ICBMs. But what they all have in common is that they are comparatively crude and unreliable.
@thomass44712 жыл бұрын
After listening to command and control I took from it the advantage the minuteman had over the titan was being solid fueled vs liquid fueled. Which enabled it to be launched much faster. When you say your silo would have been empty I believe it.
@nucflashevent2 жыл бұрын
@@Mc.Garnagle Yeah, I always get a kick out of trolls who try and use the fact both the Russians and Chinese have gone through umpteen generations of missiles since the Minutemen were installed. Every month or so when they test a random MIII off the California coast and it flies on-time *every-time* I can understand why the Russians and Chinese feel the need to keep playing catchup 😜 Speaking of the next generation of land-based ICBM, I hope they adopt the "Minuteman IV" name, that would be super cool
@Mc.Garnagle2 жыл бұрын
@@nucflashevent Absolutely. Northrup should keep the brand name alive. It's going to be another couple of years before they start the roll out.
@kevinpittman25172 жыл бұрын
this was very informative for the times it was produced and aired... it is crazy these were also the most carefree and fun times of most of our lives who experienced it... you never hear anyone say they despised the 80's and we were all living with thr threat of the end of the world just 8 minutes away at all times.
@jasoncarswell74582 жыл бұрын
Nobody despised the 80s because it was a medium improvement on the 70s, which was hot garbage in many ways.
@aguilayserpiente2 жыл бұрын
"You never hear anyone say that they despised the 80s..." except the folks bilked of their savings in mutual funds, the communities repressed by the war on drugs, or the Central Americans disappeared by the U.S. directed death squads. See Noam Chomsky, "The Washington Connection and Third World Fascism."
@ricdavid74762 жыл бұрын
The 80,s were a very troubling time for me I was born in the 50,s lots of sickness and death in my family and of course we had thatcher who was pretty right wing I went to university as a 30 year old and that was a waste of time too for me overall all my decades have been filled with ups and downs like everyone's life. Now I am near the grave I am trying to find out about God and have been doing so for about 10 years and because of that I think my last 10 years have been the most fruitful . It's never too early in life to seek God
@stevenwild392 жыл бұрын
Actually, I spent most of the 80s as a teenager expecting the world to be vaporised by nuclear war. I think a lot of my friends felt the same way.
@ricdavid74762 жыл бұрын
@@stevenwild39 I never gave it a thought even during the Cuban crisis the time we are going through now is the most messed up in my life and I feel sorry for the next generation
@michaeldarling63362 жыл бұрын
WOW. The biggest thing I noticed in this is the focus on military strategy. Being born slightly after this 1979 film was made, I've never heard a discussion of this level. Things have devolved so much since then.
@TOFKAS012 жыл бұрын
Its still there. Its just not shown anymore on TV. Nobody would watch it today.
@gozorak2 жыл бұрын
The calculus of Mutually Assured Destruction, while still relevant, is entirely different and much less unstable and dangerous than during that time. Sure strategic and tactical Nukes do still exist therefore they could be deployed either intentionally or accidentally but the risk is much less than back in the day. For one thing, nuclear weapons are not in as high a state of readiness as they were back then. There were times when hair trigger would not have been an exaggeration.
@piotrd.48502 жыл бұрын
@@TOFKAS01 Still, informed public deserves at least opportunity.
@Svensk71192 жыл бұрын
Watch War: A Commentary by Gwynn Dyer.
@leechowning27122 жыл бұрын
@@gozorak we actually did this because we discovered it was very important that the Soviet Union be aware of what we were doing. Unlike previous military tactics which focus significantly on secrecy, prevention by mutually assured destruction required that we be crystal clear on what we were ready to do. We started doing it after we noticed that the Soviet Union would be "more ambivalent or willing to listen" after we knew that they had received information from spies that we were aware of but permitted to exist. It's the reason that from the mid-60s on, media and international observers were routinely invited to observe what most other nations would consider top secret things. Because of how many times Russia has been attacked by surprise, their instinct is to distrust everyone. For example the entire arms race was a side effect of them fearing what a nation like Germany would have done as the only owner of such weapons. The US actions at the time of absolute denial of the technology to anyone didn't help, because it made it seem more likely that we would become conquerors or empire-minded with our new toy. Only after they started being able to see, obviously not everything but at least a little, was MAD functional. They needed to know how bad it could be. We no longer do these because honestly we do not consider anyone to be in our weight class anymore. The reason the US government is as addicted to its classification and secrecy now is that we see no reason to let anyone else reach our level. The same can be said for the CCP, who are honestly the only other government playing the game with us anymore. Tactics that worked well against the USSR do not work against them because they have very different mindsets.
@beryllium1932 Жыл бұрын
The general who boards the SAC airborne command post was a real life Major General in the USAF. His name was Clarence R. Autery.
@TheCraigJFisher Жыл бұрын
Did he die during the attack?
@Edgar.Valdez.Villareal Жыл бұрын
Спасибо за работу! Всегда интересно посмотреть такие фильмы и заодно подучить английский
@michaelpfister12832 жыл бұрын
This is the Cold War of my childhood. Few of the young people in this country appreciate just how profound the defeat of the Soviet Union in said cold war was in 1989-1990.
@whoever64582 жыл бұрын
In my opinion, they were defeated because they used up all their resources on wars in the Middle East and preparing in case they ended up at war with us. We ought to be careful not to make the same mistake now.
@Denzlercs2 жыл бұрын
It was great to be free from any sizable military threat, for however short of a timespan that was. Another great time in American history was shortly after the 9/11 attacks. Nothing mattered except that you were an American. Politics, religion or any other difference went out the window. This one thing I believe came from grassroots America. It wasn’t instituted from any central source. I pitied any opposing force in that time.
@pogosmama12 жыл бұрын
It was a terrifying time to live through. It was like having the sword of Damocles at our necks all the time and there were several really close calls. More than most people know. Many of these have since been declassified, and makes reflecting on that time with the new knowledge makes it even more ominous. They may be getting their butts kicked in Ukraine, but they still have ~7000 nuclear weapons that are strategic and in hair-trigger alert status. This scares the bejeezus out of me.
@Denzlercs2 жыл бұрын
@@soulsphere9242 yes the troubles began shortly after that. The unity didn’t last that terribly long. Of course, we humans have short memories and politics and other troubles soon took hold.
@cahivx2 жыл бұрын
For sure, kids these days know more about pronouns than 9/11
@nikitachirich7985 Жыл бұрын
I worked on the Prometheus cruise missile project back in the 50s , the threat of nuclear annihilation from first strike was so high , US department of energy spent 60 billion dollars developing a program for an always - airborne nuclear ramjet propulsion system that would carry 100 MT device continuously mid air at all times , only land a few times a month for repairs and maintenance. Pluto project 1957.
@rd2643 ай бұрын
wasted money time and talent
@nikitachirich79853 ай бұрын
@@rd264 From an engineering perspective it was a lot of fun, you have to remember we thought everything will be powered by nuclear power in the future. This was also a test program that had potential Space implementations for nuclear powered interplanetary travel. The missile program was riddled with problems mainly from high neutron reflector degradation and heat sync issues with the beryllium oxide nacelles, we needed something you would call nanotechnology today.
@macworks93892 жыл бұрын
Love that the B-52 out lived all the people in this movie😂
@colinstewart14322 жыл бұрын
Death from above 💥
@fredbecker6072 жыл бұрын
That is good and bad.they are getting old and the technology is old. We haven't done much to replace them either.
@whoever64582 жыл бұрын
Same. She's a good bird.
@allgood6760 Жыл бұрын
A B52.. a friend you can depend on 👍✈️
@frlouiegoad4087 Жыл бұрын
GOD will call the end of Earth not man.
@gozorak2 жыл бұрын
I spent the late 80's working on Minuteman III and MX ICBM sites out of FE Warren AFB in Cheyenne Wyoming. The 90th FMMS. Spent many an afternoon laying on top of the launcher closure concrete door that covers the top of the missile silo sunning myself while remembering this film. Also spent a few afternoons down at the bottom of the silo on a sump pump check looking up and seeing the missiles rocket exhausts. What I usually thought about however was the Chicken Maryland/corn/mashed potato foil packs I would order later that evening at the LCF's galley along with a couple of dinner rolls and a Coke. Damn that was good eating after a day of working on the instruments of the apocalypse
@lilblackduc73122 жыл бұрын
Sounds like special times that made fond memories. You deserve it...Thank you for serving so old ducks like me could safely retire. (so far) 🇺🇸 😎👍☕
@whoever64582 жыл бұрын
Thank you! This is more evidence to the idea I have that countries use regular ass people to fight wars because their rich asses have a beef (or potential beef) with some other country. Most of us could hardly give a flying fuck about this beef. I wish these rich ass leaders would just fight each other MMA style instead of involving regular ass people. I mean, what sense does that make anyway?
@gozorak Жыл бұрын
@@whoever6458 Of course its ridiculous but it is what it is and how it is. A nation can pretend that it is above it all and take no steps to defend itself and its interests but we all know what happens to that nation. The world does not turn to the lyrics of "Imagine"
@robertstewart12232 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1968. I lived through the cold war. We didn't have nuclear attack drills in elementary school like the decade before...What we had and what we lived through was FEAR. Fear that one misread radar blip or one single accidental cross into another country's air space would start a total nuclear war. This movie's intro is a perfect example of the fear in the 70's and 80's. What this narrator couldn't know was that our technology would blow through the ceiling in the 90's making a first strike that could destroy America's nuclear arsenal virtually impossible. We now have satellites that will pick up the heat signature of a Chinese or Russian soldier taking a piss next to the missile silo he/she is operating. No chance in hell of a secret first strike. But I still enjoy watching these types of movies...So thank you for putting this up.
@ciscokid01102 жыл бұрын
Born in 1960, we did have nuclear bomb drills and our desks were tiny.😊
@robertstewart12232 жыл бұрын
@@ciscokid0110 RIGHT ON my friend. Do you remember the old Civil Defense signs with the Big CD over the stairs to just about any public buildings basement? Anyway you were from a decade where nuclear war seemed inevitable...I was in the era (1970s) of "we are all fucked if the button gets pushed" so air raid drills were not practiced. ;)
@laszlozoltan50212 жыл бұрын
@@robertstewart1223 I only heard one once in Sarnia circa '75 ( chemical valley at the time)
@rcknbob12 жыл бұрын
Well, namesake, I was born in 1952 and at the time of this documentary I was a National Guard sergeant specializing in NBC warfare. It is interesting to me to look back on this program and realize that the real reason we managed to back away (somewhat) from the brink of that abyss was by spending more money on defense than the Soviet Union could. They tried to keep up, but collapsed. One thing Reagan did right.
@NAMVETSTARLITE2 жыл бұрын
WATCHED B-52 STRATOFORTRESS TAKE OFF & LAND AT WURTSMITH AFB FOR 20 YEARS AS MY GRANDPARENTS LIVED ABOUT 3 MILES FROM THE END OF THEIR 2.2-MILE RUNWAY IN OSCODA, MI. ABOUT 76 B-52s ARE STILL FLYING AFTER 67 YEARS. I WAS 9 WHEN THEY BUILT THE FIRST ONE. OOH-RAH SEMPER FIDELIS
@MichaelMcFerrin2 жыл бұрын
Portions of this video were used in the movie THE DAY AFTER 1983....worth watching.
@josephtisdale52622 жыл бұрын
Timely son of z bitch. Put the volume @ full!
@ericaltinkaya97132 жыл бұрын
I remembered it last February when Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin put his strategic nuke force on alert while giving orders to march into Ukraine! I watched this movie when i was 9 !!! And it left an indelible knowledge of the world we lived in at the time at that early age, making me appreciate the awesome power of nukes, again at the tender age of nine😁 !! As a grown adult I've grimaced and run my mouth at Washington and Brussels everytime they gobbled up a former Warsaw pact or even former Soviet Republic into their ( by now a nefarious outfit) club NATO encroaching ever closer to the still underdeveloped, mostly rural threat to no one Russia, yet perfectly capable dog if rubbed the wrong way with the world's largest stockpile of mega thermonuclear warheads count !!! Wish every nation on the planet acquire an adequate stockpile of nukes .... It would have saved Eye-raq from wanton and murderous Anglo-American onslaught, done with complete impunity, a million lives simply deemed inferior and accordingly extinguished because a cabal of criminals in London and Washington DC, thought might made it right.... God bless Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin ❤️
@Thrazkar2 жыл бұрын
Threads kicks The Day After's backside - every time!
@jodyssey99212 жыл бұрын
I thought so!
@Bacopa68 Жыл бұрын
@@Thrazkar Don't forget Miracle Mile.
@Indrid__Cold2 жыл бұрын
Being born in 1958, I lived through most of the Cold War. When I was a sophomore in high school, I became interested in nuclear weapons and nuclear war. I remember finding a bound copy of "The Long Term Effects of Multiple Nuclear Detonations." It was the polar opposite of the nuclear winter hypothesis of the mid 1980s. The conclusion of the report was, "no biggie!" And back then, the US and USSR had about 1.5 gigatons of fun for each other.
@hlnbee2 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1942. We had air raid drills in elementary school and hid under our desks.
@Nn.65juk Жыл бұрын
@@hlnbee omg... You where born in good countries. My grandfather was born in 1915 and he never went to school. He grew up in extreme poverty but he lived 107 years.... I miss him so much. He teached a lot.... He encouraged me to go to college in 2019 when i finished school. I thank him.... So much. He died 2 days ago.
@paulafriedman528 Жыл бұрын
@Helen yes, and the cold War terrors took generations until 1989 to 1991 glasnost began to ease the threat of such horror. Now in the global responses to the covid19 pestilence (ongoing), in the international stress and madness, both the US/EU and Putin-ruled Russia seem on course to return that horror to potential reign. 2 generations we have been given; can we locate the wisdom to let human life go on?
@undertow2142 Жыл бұрын
I think you read a publication from the department of defense contractors. Propaganda to sell billions of dollars of excess.
@EphemeralProductions8 ай бұрын
Bizarre
@dennissvitak1482 жыл бұрын
I was stationed at Offutt AFB, Strategic Air Command HQ, from 1975-1977..it was a pretty scary place. Those boys weren't playin'. Then I got assigned to the first NATO A-10 base, and THAT was a blast!
@MrKKmusic2 жыл бұрын
This was great! I remember the existential fear of the period from 1978 to 1981. We were certain that the Soviets were stronger. Our inflation and prime lending rates were hovering around 18% Then we lost Iran, a bulwark against Soviet intrigue in the Middle East. Love him or not, Reagan brought a new optimism that was Italy needed. More importantly, he pivoted sharply toward reducing nuclear weapons. And of course, the USSR was dying from the cancer that had been eating away at it for many years.
@florinivan69072 жыл бұрын
Iran wasn't good news for the soviets either. They were actually a bigger problem for them since they provided inspiration for mujahedin fighters in Afghanistan.
@MrKKmusic2 жыл бұрын
@@florinivan6907 good point!
@florinivan69072 жыл бұрын
@@MrKKmusic To be fair this wouldn't have yet been obvious circa 1979. Iran was so unlike other states of the era that no one knew what to make of it. For politicians who had had to deal for 30 years with atheist communism suddenly dealing with an explicitly religious leadership was weird. They had no procedure for it. It took more than a decade until a basic idea of how to deal with Iran emerged.
@MrKKmusic2 жыл бұрын
@@florinivan6907 I thought Iran was under the sway of the Shah. He was a staunch US ally who detested the Soviets. He was also brutal to his own people. Since the Iranian people, rightly, saw the US as the Shah’s main benefactor, they had then - and to this day, great antipathy to the US. We were and are ‘The Great Satan’ in their eyes
@thecandyman93082 жыл бұрын
@@florinivan6907 good point. hadn't really thought of it that way before.
@fredliperson91712 жыл бұрын
This is why ballistic nuclear subs are over a billion dollars a pop..They are the most sophisticated machine mankind has ever made...
@colinstewart14322 жыл бұрын
Comparable to the Space Shuttle.
@stanleyharrell60092 жыл бұрын
But you have a very survivable weapon system with the Trident D-5 missile that is now a counterforce weapon against specific targets instead of countervalue weapons that were city busters.
@Rawdiswar2 жыл бұрын
@@stanleyharrell6009 counterforce vs countervalue?
@stanleyharrell60092 жыл бұрын
@@Rawdiswar Counterforce are weapons capable of taking out missile command center, missile silos, C3I centers and Air Force bases. Usually these warheads have CEPs 100-400 yds. Countervalue are the old city busters that have CEP accuracy 1/4 mi to several miles. They can take out soft targets, cities, manufacturing centers, but not “precision” targets.
@whoever64582 жыл бұрын
Well I'm sure the price is inflated right along with the fears they try to stoke in people, which aren't without warrant, but are intentionally provoked for the profit of rich people who will likely never see a war actually threaten them or their progeny. I don't know exactly how it works in other countries but I suspect that, like us in the US and especially in other large countries, the rich never have to personally see a war. They might be honorable enough to volunteer but no one is forcing richie rich to fight by draft or because of poverty in any country, including those with a robust draft.
@elleodurkin409Ай бұрын
That eight minutes of action at the start was more exciting and compelling than any Hollywood movie that I've seen in the last five years. Is there any video of this that's better than 720p?
@brd400 Жыл бұрын
I’ll tell you this video really hits home I was in the Air Force in sac during the end of Vietnam war. This stuff this is exactly what we practice back then today the modern nuclear submarines have eliminated all this.
@SuckasNeverPlayMe10 ай бұрын
Man... I flew B52s into the tunnels at Cu Chi... It was hell down there man... You don't know... YOU DON'T KNOW!!
@CCGNZ658 ай бұрын
Have this eery feeling that some kind of AI inspired detection may make the most survivable leg of the Triad vulnerable as well,if satellite tech w/AI can peer through the ocean depths there may come a time subs can be hunted and their positions fixed,what then? I don't know
@brucesmith4842 жыл бұрын
My sister-in-law’s step father was the “senior controller at the command post”….Maj. Dale Smethurst, USAF.
@whoever64582 жыл бұрын
My dad was one of the ICBM computer scientists. Very cool. Good thing we all in the world have had the sense so far not to launch on each other.
@austria-hungary49815 ай бұрын
1979 - *The B-52 is outdated!* 2024 - *B-52 outlives mostly everyone from the movie*
@MegaGman612 жыл бұрын
Wow, I remember seeing this when it aired! I think it was on a PBS station when I was in the Navy stationed In San Diego.
@richardfannin9652 Жыл бұрын
that was back in the magical time when PBS showed documentaries...the focus now for PBS is socialist propaganda and LGBTQGC+.
@mikeboyd6532 Жыл бұрын
Wow! This was before they decommissioned the Titan II complement. Great piece of film.
@steffenritter74972 жыл бұрын
I remember doing "duck & cover" drills in Kindergarten. My school was about a mile from O'Hare Airport, which sported an Air National Guard unit, back then (1955).
@steffenritter74972 жыл бұрын
@Interfacer I'm pretty sure that the people who voted for "these issues" are all dead, now. The greatest danger to the entire human race, today ... and surprisingly enough ... is not Putin or Xi, but the Democrat Party headed by the senile old man in the White House. Of course, he's a "tough guy" who has beat up lots of guys in his time. Let's see him beat up Russian and Chinese nukes - only then will I be impressed.
@kennethkestner15052 жыл бұрын
The b1 was cancelled at this time,&the b2 wasn't ready yet. We now have those, and the b52 is still going strong. Subs r now pin point accurate.
@unhingedreality95182 жыл бұрын
I member as a child using binoculars to look at a Nike missile on its launcher. They had to open the doors and elevate the missiles to dry them out because of high humidity. This happened about once a month.
@phettywappharmaceuticalsll88422 жыл бұрын
Nike?? Hey “just do it”
@todd48662 жыл бұрын
Yup , I grew up near a USAF SAC base in upstate NY. I remember seeing that same view . I work with a contractor supporting the development of the ALCM ( Air Launched Cruse Missile) at that same SAC base in the mid 70's . They always had 2 fully loaded B-52's crewed and ready sitting on the end of the runway 24/7 !!
@jasonsabourin2275 Жыл бұрын
"Nike A Go Go"...Jersey had them. "Human tongue hits aluminum plate, it's a Missile boy, Go Go Go Go Go, Death machine and Man...In Love, Go".
@justinhaase8825 Жыл бұрын
I’m 41 so I remember the fear as a kid…in the past two months I’ve seen both a Barksdale B-52 and 2 “doomsday” 747s from Offut doing just normal training overhead with my own eyes. A totally different world just 30 years ago…
@grahamfisher5436 Жыл бұрын
B52s been present at RAF Lyneham
@kenwelckle3672 жыл бұрын
Industrial military complex loved this piece of proganda.
@bsowers222 жыл бұрын
As soon as I heard them mention the MX missile project, I said yep, propaganda piece.
@jasoncarswell74582 жыл бұрын
Correctly identifies who to blame, but can't even spell it correctly... this is the future of Leftism in America.
@Hunter_Nebid Жыл бұрын
The same one that kept the Free world free?
@Hunter_Nebid Жыл бұрын
@@bsowers22 and?
@kenwelckle367 Жыл бұрын
@@Hunter_Nebid you mean like how military industrial complex profited from that vietnam war, & illegal invasion of Iraq war.
@gregmercil39682 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1980, the year after this was made. I’m old enough to remember the Cold War and being terrified as a kid of the “evil Russians” annihilating us all. Even after the Cold War ended, well into the 90s as a teenager I would sometimes have very vivid nightmares of WWIII starting without any kind of warning whatsoever. In these dreams I had, I kept saying “but I thought the Cold War was over???” That deeply seated fear of WWIII I had mostly went away for about 20 years, but came back with a sickening vengeance when Russia decided to be stupid and invade Ukraine earlier this year, making nuclear threats and whatnot. The people I currently work with made fun of me for it, but they are too young to have any living memory of the Cold War therefore they cannot comprehend why I have such an intense fear of nuclear Armageddon occurring.
@stevegray52632 жыл бұрын
I'm a 1974 kid but what you've written describes my mindset exactly. I spent part of February this year puking with anxiety and while that's subsided I'm still anxious and imagine mushroom clouds in the sky. The media is certainly not helping. Why can't humans just be nice to each other?
@penjameson2 жыл бұрын
I feel exactly the same, even worse now I have children, the thought of us not all being together if this ever happens kills me inside….one of my children has autism and is only 8, I feel anxious that if he survived and we didnt who would look after him, he wouldn’t have a clue what was going on, the thought of him being scared and alone scares the living hell out of me, all these scenarios go through my mind, nuclear war has terrified me for as long as I remember…..
@ianedmonds91912 жыл бұрын
@@stevegray5263 I had the Nuclear bomb dream again last night for the first time since the 70s. It was horrible. I was a distance away from ground zero but my son had lost his warm coat. I spent most of it looking for his coat. We got into an aircraft that was overloaded and ended up with the pilot crashing on a bridge where he had people he needed to save. It was just a frame to frame litany of desperation and despair. I'm still disturbed today awake. Really shaken. I remember this fear. Luv and Peace.
@ianedmonds91912 жыл бұрын
The Bomb dream is so vivid for all of us that grew up in the early 80s. I too had the bomb dream again last night but it was worse because rather than being at school and crying out for my parents I was the parent looking to find my Son and save him from the nightmare. It was all sorts of nightmarish. The bomb dropped far enough away we weren't hurt but he'd lost his warm coat so lots of time in a surreal search for his coat the we joined a bunch of people leaving to a safe place. The flight was over weight but we took off then the pilot landed on a nearby bridge to save some people he knew and could not get airborne again. Just freaky nightmare shit from then on. Other Nukes landing and a general freaking out from all concerned. Horrifying. I remember dreaming about being let out of school at lunchtime and looking south towards a local airbase and seeing the Mushroom cloud go up and be completely panicked by the fact I was about 20 mins walk from my house. We'd talked as a family about nuclear Armageddon and agreed we do it as a family. As a nieve 8 year old kid this seemed like a solution. My nightmare was I would not be able to get back in time. Traumatizing stuff. The image of the mushroom cloud rising over the field beside my school is one I will never forget. Luv and Peace.
@MayorGoldieWilson8252 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1979 and never once was afraid of or even gave a thought to the Russians. Where did you grow up that there was such fear? The first conflict of any kind that I remember clearly was the first Gulf War when I was 11.
@brihath0805 Жыл бұрын
I was a SAC Maintenance Officer in the 1970's and went through many exercises and ORI's. I was a little taken aback about how this movie portrayed the USA as being caught flat-footed in a Soviet attack scenario. I remember we went to DEFCON 3 during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War. We loaded up every bomber we had with nukes and were preparing to exercise our dispersal plan when we were to told to stand down. All of this was the result of ships carrying Soviet SCUDS being detected sailing through the dardenelles on the way to Egypt. Our intel system would have had plenty of warning regarding changes in the disposition of Soviet forces leading up to this attack scenario. KH-11 and Rhyolyte SIGINT satellites had the USSR blanketed by the late 1970's and we would not have been caught unawares as shown in this scenario. There is a lot of literary license being given here. However, we must be mindful that there are adversary nations that still have many thousands of nuclear weapons and I feel we have let our guard down. Our military forces are a shadow of what they were in the 1980's in terms of lethality, redundancy and effective command and control. Also, one side note. I don't believe the 5th Bomb Wing at Minot had B-52D's. They were either B-52G's or B-52H's, which they now have.
@florinivan6907 Жыл бұрын
For me the biggest failing of this scenario is not the complete failure of every intel asset. Its far simpler. How exactly would the soviets transmit their ultimatum if absolutely no one is listening?Presumably the president is on AF1 by this point and being shown by advisors what is left of the deterrent. I think the last thing that he would do in those moments is ask 'have the soviets explained what's going on and what their demands are if any?'. If anything as a security measure they'd probably stop all contacts with the soviets. And would any general bother to tell him 'they're demanding our surrender' as opposed to a more realistic 'we can still hit these targets and take out this'. In those moments the last thing on anyone's mind would be 'lets see what if anything do the soviets have to say about this'. A surrender ultimatum has no effect if no one is listening. Unless you try and flood every possible frequency. There are other practical issues. The french and the british are nonexistent. It would be close to impossible for the US to prevent those two from launching everything they had. If anything in such a chaotic atmosphere their more limited intel assets would drive them towards far more negative assumptions even if the US was still in touch.'the yanks are asking us to surrender?is it possible the soviets have compromised our secure links and we don't know it?what the hell launch everything and we'll figure it out later.' And I would add one last issue completely ignored a constitutional one. The president is the commander in chief but nowhere in the Constitution is it even implied that he has the power to surrender the US as a nation. Can he?At the very least a constitutional scholar would need to be consulted. Because someone might logically posit that such a power is not his to make. He can lead the military but its debateable if he can actually surrender it. Its never happened. It can be argued that a surrender is unconstitutional. That it goes above the presidential prerogative.
@tomp80946 ай бұрын
The "Bolt Out Of The Blue" surprise attack/First Strike was a bit far fetched. At Wing Pre-Departure Briefing we would receive an Intel Briefing on the current state of readiness of Soviet Strategic Forces - disposition and location of Key Soviet Leadership and many other Strategic Warning Indicators.
@ailouros66694 ай бұрын
Yeah March AFB had the D-models until 1983. And it's not a matter of letting one's guard down. It was the for-profit model that the Military Industrial Complex operates on, along with extensive and pervasive corruption in DC in terms of economic, domestic and foreign affairs that has caused the gradual (now accelerated under the Biden administration) decline of the United States.
@rd2643 ай бұрын
you are typical of the cold war lunatics that are featured in this promoting the endless arms race. guess who profited?
@videosuperhighway76552 жыл бұрын
I remember those days, and now we are back Cold War II
@timmotel5804 Жыл бұрын
AND We Are #2 NOW! Far behind our adversaries in every way. Complacency and useless politicians
@bidenwearstrumpscrappypamp1829 Жыл бұрын
The only adversaries we have are the criminals that run our country
@RideAcrossTheRiver Жыл бұрын
@@timmotel5804 What? You think Russia is superior to NATO?
@jamjardj19746 ай бұрын
Same one, just took a pause.
@rogerthornton40682 жыл бұрын
It's amazing we survived this era.
@garyreid78652 жыл бұрын
history repeating its self
@cann07082 жыл бұрын
Well let's not be too hasty just yet, we'll wait a bit first
@jimknapp3862 жыл бұрын
Well, thankfully the politicians and militaries are just as scared of nuclear war as we are.
@garyr70272 жыл бұрын
It's those getting under the desk for protection simulations is why we survived.
@davidlang44422 жыл бұрын
There were a few times we nearly didn't. False alerts nearly got the world blown to hell.
@billyponsonby Жыл бұрын
The book Overkill by John Cox is an excellent explanation of the state of affairs when it was written at the same time as this documentary.
@johnnybarfield44022 жыл бұрын
This needs to be shown on tv again to remind people of what could happen.
@RichV202 жыл бұрын
Watch any daily news updates on Russia getting their ass kicked in Ukraine to see what would happen.
@aquasnek54872 жыл бұрын
Fuck this, air Threads on all channels simultaneously.
@stevengill17362 жыл бұрын
One Trident sub carries enough hardware to obliterate every major city in wherever. Most of the ICBMs have been stood down for years now, and no one plans to deliver nukes by plane. Things are totally different in 2022 from 1978... Of course everyone has submarines these days, but the poinr is that diplomacy has been very successful so far, and other than the Ukraine,Russia has been amenable to negociations. I would be more concerned with Pakistan or North Korea. China, for all our disagreements needs the US as much as we need them. At this point climate change is far more likely to do us harm than nuclear attack. Now nuclear terrorism is another matter entirely ...
@piotrd.48502 жыл бұрын
I'd say Countdown to Looking Glass is better choice - along with Threads and "On the 8th Day" :)
@stab742 жыл бұрын
@@piotrd.4850 Don't forget By Dawns Early Light!
@mikearmstrong84832 жыл бұрын
The ending about the US caving to an ultimatum is nonsense, as we had a launch-on-warning policy. In the event of a confirmed attack, we would not have been left with 46 missiles and 22 bombers; we would have been left with 1,000 empty silos and 300+ empty bomber parking spots before the incoming arrived, and there would have been no one left on the other side to give any ultimatum.
@richarda9962 жыл бұрын
The bombers are no longer on standby. We still have the subs on rotation. The minute man has been dismantled. The radar stations are minimum maned. Satellites do most of the monitoring.
@mikearmstrong84832 жыл бұрын
@@richarda996 Thank you, but I'm referring back to the time this was taking place. The bombers haven't been on standby for about 40 years now. And we don't have 1,000 ICBMs any more. And there aren't those golf ball radomes that we used to see on every mountain top. Doesn't that make us feel old?
@mikearmstrong84832 жыл бұрын
Minuteman 1 & 2 are gone, but there are still hundreds of Minuteman 3 in service.
@redfoot692 жыл бұрын
Since bill Clinton time; unless changed are long range missiles are not target russia; we agreed to 1st actually be hit before retailate
@Fucktheworld140202 жыл бұрын
@@mikearmstrong8483 450 minute man missiles to be exact!
@johnmitchell89252 жыл бұрын
Hard to believe this was 40 years ago.And look at us now
@grahamfisher5436 Жыл бұрын
only this time !! we're not talking about a peaceful solution?! May sense and sensibility lead and prevail
@SteveWard151 Жыл бұрын
Why? It is gonna happen sooner or later.
@grahamfisher5436 Жыл бұрын
@@SteveWard151 NOW I AM become Death, the destroyer of worlds'. Oppenheimer he's saying,, it's gonna happen someday.. Google The FLOWERS REPORT ( nuclear)
@herptek Жыл бұрын
The more things change the more they stay the same.
@Springbok2952 жыл бұрын
I remember seeing on TV I think it was the PBS channel back when I was in the 8th grade (1981-1982) a series of programs that talked about the superiority of Soviet numbers in aircraft, artillery, men, and tanks over us and NATO. A couple of classmates got into a big argument over it during PE class the following day.
@williammitchell44172 жыл бұрын
And in the Modern Day... Russian tanks are junk. The subs are rusting hulks. Yet their fighter craft are no joke.
@jasoncarswell74582 жыл бұрын
The kid that argued the Soviets were full of shit was right. Fast forward to 2022: that kid is still arguing that the Russians are full of shit, and he's still right.
@PeterSquitieri2 жыл бұрын
@@williammitchell4417 then where are all those fighter jets in Ukraine?
@williammitchell44172 жыл бұрын
@@PeterSquitieri good question. It's been reported that Putin is holding the aircraft back. Much like with our Stingers in Afghanistan, Putin doesn't want to risk it.
@thedausthed2 жыл бұрын
@@williammitchell4417 Their fighters would not stand a snowball's chance in hell against the USAF.
@elrond37378 ай бұрын
this is starting to feel very relevant again. I grew up in the cold war and thought it was over in 91... it is back and with a vengeance
@EphemeralProductions8 ай бұрын
😢😢😢. I know it.
@SilverHammer19697 ай бұрын
It's not the Cold War pt. 2, it's a nut in Moscow with a death wish.
@elrond37377 ай бұрын
@@SilverHammer1969 not just Moscow. It is also everyone in the West who talks about it so nonchalantly.
@AnonJohn1436 ай бұрын
@@elrond3737 disagree, it is the Russian media and their pundits that are opening Pandora box. Those animals talk about it seriously, as in actually doing it. Our nonchalant response is meant to de escalate. Give me that, any day in comparison.
@ailouros66694 ай бұрын
@@SilverHammer1969 No, Joe Biden who approved the change from a Second Strike to a First Strike policy for US nuclear forces back on March 28, 2022. And now made worse by the absolutely stupid attack on one of Russia's ballistic missile early warning radars in Voronezh by Ukrainian forces this year.
@jeanbonnefoy1377 Жыл бұрын
25:00 interesting comment about the B52's life expectancy in 1980 when seen now in retrospect, almost 45 years later: they're still well alive and kicking and expected to carry on and probably reach the 90 years of active service milestones. Interesting too to see how low was the reliance on the submarine part of the triad due to the lack of precision of the nuclear heads they carried then.
@1982nsu Жыл бұрын
25:30 It's funny that this gentleman says that the B-52 would not be viable by 1995 and yet they are now projected to be in service in the year 2040 at the minimum if not into the 2050s. See "How Long Can the B-52 Continue in Service?" kzbin.info/www/bejne/qoO3ZpqVapV8n80 And... "The B-52 Will Fly For Over 100 Years With Its New Rolls Royce Engines!" kzbin.info/www/bejne/lZOkkGmXbM2XjKc ENJOY!
@DirtyLilHobo2 жыл бұрын
USSR dissolved December 25, 1991. But, now we have the Putin and Ukraine problem.
@thorstenkock18032 жыл бұрын
This is really terrifying to see. I was born in 1984, the movie is from 1979. Taking Russian aggession in 2022 into account, I guess I never would have been born without the vigilance of the US strategic forces. I want to say a big "thank you" to all the veterans who helped to keep the freedom of the western world alive 😊 Greetings from (West) Germany
@MrMSalexanderMK2 жыл бұрын
The only aggressor on the planet is the USA
@borninvincible2 жыл бұрын
Vigilance of US forces? Please, read a fucking book.
@garrisonnichols8072 жыл бұрын
@@borninvincible yeah what do you think the USA was doing during the cold war? We were watching the Russians 24/7 with a massive spy network.
@bidenwearstrumpscrappypamp18292 жыл бұрын
You don't know half the story of what's going on except what you hear and see on msm nonsense.
@thorstenkock18032 жыл бұрын
@@bidenwearstrumpscrappypamp1829 is this what Moscow Mitch told you, Trumpy-Boy? 🤡
@paulanderson7796 Жыл бұрын
7:20 - that's gotta be the quickest jet engine start of all time.
@grahamfisher5436 Жыл бұрын
RAF VULCAN BOMBER QRA. those pilots got their QRA SCRAMBLE EXERCISES down to 1 minute 40 seconds .. watch the rebuilding the Vulcan video 👍
@88KeysOnFire6 ай бұрын
In 1976-1979 I used to live "next door" to a Minuteman missile silo" located between Hamilton Airfield near Novato, Ca. and the Marin Civic Center, it was up the railroad tracks behind the Civic Center halfway up to Hamilton Field, about five football fields or stadiums away. We walked by it 100 yards away from the railroad tracks many times. The silo has since been decommissioned, also as redevelopment of Hamilton Field by Marin County proceeds. There was also a Fish and Rod Gun Club, mostly pheasant hunting with rental English hunting dog kennels down the road from a small railroad trestle. Atop the silo was an active shift change break room, and the whole silo was fenced in with a few layers of gate security, one of the security guards "Detex clock key stations", aside from Hamilton Airfield.
@richbattaglia5350 Жыл бұрын
This gets me going… Like the calm silence right before the gun fires to start a marathon.
@Denzlercs2 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1978. The nuclear threat from the Soviet Union hung in the back of my mind almost continuously during the Cold War. Nowadays the threat is almost certainly as present as it was then, only from multiple sources taking aim.
@u.s.militia76822 жыл бұрын
You were like 13 years old when the Cold War ended. Back then the threat was a hundredfold. We constantly trained to kill “Ivan” and to survive against anything he threw at us. Today’s threats are drama drummed up by mainstream media.
@aethrya Жыл бұрын
A great number of people would survive a full on nuclear war and the earth would recover from a nuclear winter within 7-10 years.
@paulafriedman528 Жыл бұрын
People are asking is "don't look up" about climate change or covid19. Apparently they're only looking *partway* up, not at what may still be the biggest looming threat of all.
@shamrock241r8 Жыл бұрын
The threat comes from our own government, don't believe me get vx and boosted.
@todd3285 Жыл бұрын
🐂💩 You were 13 years old .
@matthewgaines102 жыл бұрын
Yet MX was canceled and Minuteman III is still active. Trident 4 is joining the fleet. This film had good intentions but bad data. The SLBM fleet can almost do the entire job by itself with it’s 10 MRVs and being hard to find at sea. Trident 4 is quite accurate. And the B-52 still is on the job but joined by the B-1, B-2, and B-21
@colinstewart14322 жыл бұрын
MX was deemed too expensive due to the design of a massive railway to move them around.
@hldarte2 жыл бұрын
I sure felt safe in school getting under my desk with my back to the windows watching a turtle telling me to “duck and cover” over and over… nearly 60 years ago…
@jfrtbikgkdhjbeep99742 жыл бұрын
good info ... good to know, thank you
@jfrtbikgkdhjbeep99742 жыл бұрын
@@hldarte damnnn ✌️😁
@penforprez7 ай бұрын
The MX wasn't canceled. It simply was stripped of the whole nonsensical multiple launcher part and built as a standalone missile (the Peacekeeper ICBM) which they stuffed in old Minuteman silos. It was deployed for less than 20 years because the Peacekeeper was designed to be MIRV-capable, and multiple warheads per missile was forbidden as part of START II. The final Peacekeepers were taken out of service in 2005.
@g2macs2 жыл бұрын
The Cold war/ Nuclear winters never botherd me one bit, as I live next door to the only SSBN base in Europe, before my component atoms hit the atmosphere, I would like to say 'cheerio'.
@whoever64582 жыл бұрын
Good night and good luck. Also, we (at least me here in the US) apologize for the inconvenience.
@GaryCameron10 ай бұрын
I used to live just up the road from Canada's Diefenbunker. My house would have been blown to matchsticks if this went down for real.
@HardCase191126 күн бұрын
The entire thing went obsolete the minute trident d5 rolled out.
@Salguod2k2 жыл бұрын
Many things have changed since this was made.
@frankshannon3235 Жыл бұрын
Interestingly, the USAF has plans to keep the remaining B-52s until 2050. The existing inventory is 76 planes. There are 46 B-1B's and 20 B-2's. The B-21 will replace the B-1B's and B-2's in the 30's.
@davidjakiela9553 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed in Germany in 1980. I remember a NATO alert that scared All of us. They pulled out trunks of bayonets from the arms room and then waited. We were told that was the sign we were going to war, bayonets being issued. After waiting all night they called off the alert. After 40 yrs I still wonder about that night
@richardfannin9652 Жыл бұрын
I was in 2 ACR in 1989, first duty station. That first year we routinely had alerts but no bayos issued out. Wonder what that was in 1980 that had USAREUR scared.
@MichaelBoltonsEntireCatalog Жыл бұрын
June 3 or 6, 1980. False alarms at NORAD notified all US forces something was up, Zbigniew Brezenski woke up Carter to possibly push The Button...turned out it was a computer error, faulty chip on the global monitoring system. My birth year is 1975, but US history, especially military and pop culture from 1950-1980, has always fascinated me.
@michaelgoff4504 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing; this was a good look into what some people were thinking about defense more than 40 years ago. I was born just after this film came out (1981) and I have only the haziest memory of the Cold War and the Soviet Union being a scary menace. In 1979, the US spent about 5% of GDP on defense. In 2021, the US spent 3.5% of GDP on defense. At no point during the post-September 11 arms buildup did the US spend a greater portion of GDP on defense than when this film came out. The Bush 43 administration did some good things, especially in setting up the modern Missile Defense Agency and withdrawing from the ABM Treaty, but very few politicians since the end of the Cold War have taken defense nearly as seriously as they should. The threat of nuclear war is still very real, and if it wasn't crystal clear already, it should be obvious since the Russian invasion of Ukraine that the honeymoon has come to an end.
@michaelgoff4504 Жыл бұрын
@adodgyworld I can't argue with either of those things. To this day I don't see that missile defense is taken nearly as seriously as it should be.
@AndrewJacobson-cq2om7 ай бұрын
Still realivant today, after 49yrs im surprised im still here....
@kenl5290Ай бұрын
Notice now, all the 80’s movies about nuclear war, are showing up on KZbin? Makes you think.
@AndrewDaley-lr9qg29 күн бұрын
They do this from time to time to keep us all on edge it's psychological war fare. I'm from the UK and I'm getting bombarded with prepping videos and somthing is going to to happen in November videos. Just ignore them
@jpmnky2 жыл бұрын
These are so cool. Could you post World War 3 sometime. It’s on KZbin and was made in 1990 I believe. It really shows that things in Europe could’ve ended much differently.
@JamesPhieffer2 жыл бұрын
Do you have a link or anything? Sounds interesting.
it's on KZbin 👍 also... QED A guild to Armageddon ON the 8th day
@pershingii2424 Жыл бұрын
@@JamesPhieffer The Third World War is the title and it was made in '98 from Germany. Was stationed in Germany at the time the wall came down and this movie is pretty good at the possible outcome that could have taken place.
@jayrob121 Жыл бұрын
I think this is the one you're talking about. kzbin.info/www/bejne/p2LQaKKmhKyGo7M
@dawnlord48932 жыл бұрын
The majority of the scenes in this video are in the tv movie "The Day After"
@droberts16645 ай бұрын
I remember watching this in high school. This is what this new generation needs to watch. That way theyll know what can happen. Instead of thinking the whole world are our friends. Ive always been a believer that our firces should ALWAYS be armed and ready on a seconds notice.
@kuznickic1 Жыл бұрын
I remember the Cold War vividly. Grew up in the 80s and remember the occasional nuclear raid drill. Grew up near LaPorte county which didn’t realize was a target of the Soviet ICBMs because of the Allison factory.
@superchad4610 Жыл бұрын
Im still here.
@georgemcneal92972 жыл бұрын
80 years overdue ,bout time for another one.
@thomaswhitten25372 жыл бұрын
I've never believed for one second that such a surprise first strike would be successful in any capacity even in it's time.
@thealarmclock93072 жыл бұрын
Haven't I seen you make similar comments?? We get it.. you don't buy it.
@AlamoOriginal2 жыл бұрын
you know there's a research on why people like you stubbornly believe why in any such cases such scenario could never happen, researchers say because its so catastrophic and existentially terrifying that your brain wired as if it's impossible for anyone to let it happen, even though the chances are its still high and probable
@gozorak2 жыл бұрын
depends on what your definition of "successful" would be. The results would have been devastating to humanity either way. There could easily have been a scenario(there actually was in 1983) where the Soviets were so fearful of a surprise American/NATO first strike based on miscalculation, misinformation, and paranoia that they may have felt compelled to launch everything first feeling they had no other alternative and hoping that they could miraculously catch us completely by surprise and destroy enough of our retaliatory capacity that we would capitulate. That scenario did not occur thankfully but not impossible to imagine. Look up KGB Operation RYAN and the 1983 joint American/NATO military training exercise Able Archer and what the Soviets mistakenly thought it was a prelude to.
@thomass44712 жыл бұрын
@@AlamoOriginal The reason why it’s hard to believe is easy. The triad of bombers, ICBMS and subs was designed that if even 2 of the 3 were knocked out the other one had the capability of responding massively. Which would almost certainly be the ballistic missile subs. You take out the first two you still have hundreds of SLBMs with thousands of warheads to deal with.
@maganazikaren22112 жыл бұрын
Republican NEOCON propaganda machine video
@kennethohnemus31922 ай бұрын
Just remember that the people in this video have never heard of stealth technology. And here comes the fleet of B-21 Raiders
@alancranford33982 жыл бұрын
This is the ultimate expression of the Douhet Strategy. The shortcomings of this strategy are obvious--the nuclear option works only as long as being destroyed bothers anybody, and there are many more microaggressions below the nuclear threshold.
@ballisticdan91352 жыл бұрын
On the day Putins flexing his nuclear muscles this films very sobering.
@hubertwalters43002 жыл бұрын
Everyone expects that if Putin resorts to using nuclear weapons,it will be tactical nukes against Ukraine, but what if why we are all thinking that,he instead launched a nuclear attack on the US,with SLBM's and some ICBM's,would the US have time to launch a counterstrike?
@65gtotrips2 жыл бұрын
Well…this film was 43 ! years ago…our submarine missile accuracy is ions more capable. Additionally, our cruise missiles are deployed across multiple ship and aircraft platforms. - The F-14 Tomcat wasn’t even in its heyday yet.
@himoffthequakeroatbox43202 жыл бұрын
Were the Minuteman crews asleep? They're situated a long way from the sea for a reason. A number of B52s (and before that B47s and B36s) were in the air at all times. So those couldn't be caught on the ground. As for the submarines, you can only sink them if you can find them.
@richardfannin9652 Жыл бұрын
You're right; as good as this was it was still just a position piece.
@timmotel5804 Жыл бұрын
It's a shame that SAC is gone and so are the "Ready Aircraft" that were always in the air. I'm not confident that they still have nuclear armed B52's on the ground ready for immediate take off. They did at Carswell the last time that I was there, when it still existed...
@mark-js4qk7 ай бұрын
Love it, can't WAIT!!!
@pfclumi5 ай бұрын
Same here.
@paulrossi8481 Жыл бұрын
Times have changed! Submarine accuracy is the game changer, for both sides. Bottom line, NO ONE wins so don’t engage in it. True M.A.D.
@fredlandry61702 жыл бұрын
I was 9 years old it was a scary time.
@simonboland2 жыл бұрын
Lt Krause didn't get to go to the hacienda. Poor man.
@michaelcanty4940 Жыл бұрын
He and his date did go out and went to the Atomic Cafe.
@colinstewart1432 Жыл бұрын
Probably an un-PC opinion but I really miss the Cold War.
@NaughtyAelf Жыл бұрын
Same. You're not alone in that. On the plus side, finding out how bad the corruption is in the Russian military, that's been a goddamn treat.
@JF-xq6fr5 ай бұрын
Put your hand on the KEY SIR! Turn your key SIR!
@justasimpleguy7211 Жыл бұрын
When I was stationed at Langley back in the early 80s Me and a buddy in the same unit got an incentive ride on a 135 variant. Damn, I should know the full MDS because I supported the system for TAC that tracked aircraft utilization. Anyway I think it was a KC-135B/EC135C because it was a tanker and it had the seating and communications for airborne command. The clicking sound when the red toolbox was opened is spot-on! On the flight we were supposed to refuel a flight of F-15s over the Blue Ridge but the F-15 mission was cancelled. The CMS did take me and my buddy into the boom cubby. Basically laying down in a cubby at the back of the fuselage and there were some analog dials, some switches and a joystick for the boom. Oh, and thick plexiglass with a view from altitude over the Blue Ridge. While taking the refueling boom for a joyride. LOL!
@michaeldique2 жыл бұрын
I wonder what they would say if they knew the B- 52 would still be in use in 2022?
@johnd4348 Жыл бұрын
The makers of those planes would have said WOW, we should have sold them for 4 times as much.
@dennissvitak1482 жыл бұрын
There are a lot of BIG logic flaws in this. First...this pre-supposes that there would be NO pre-existing tension between the super powers, and thus, no upgrade to our DEFCON.
@chrisbruch71362 жыл бұрын
It's truly a shame that we hate each other so much that we'd rather die in a horrific war than peacefully get along. Peace 2u and God Bless y'all
@willc12942 жыл бұрын
The guy from Rand in this video overestimated the capabilities of Russia bombers & pilots imo. I think it was realised after the cold war that the Soviets were overestimated across many areas in which they were in reality deficient. The tu-22 bomber wasn't comparable to a plane like the B-1, the blackjack would be a nearer counterpart and that only entered service in small numbers years after this film was made.
@davidj46622 жыл бұрын
@@willc1294 Now it's the other way around.
@whoever64582 жыл бұрын
Amen to that! Just like arguments are better than physical fights, so are compromises better than sending the proxies of our poor young men and women to kill each other in war. Violence is the recourse of fools early on and the action of the desperate if you wait too long to settle it peaceably. I'm sure most regular ass people in every country understand this but a lot of people make a lot of money and create a lot of power for themselves promoting conflict instead, both at home and abroad and I have no doubt this is true to some extent in every country. According to biology, humans are animals and conflict makes more sense for animals. If we want to think of ourselves as higher animals, we ought to start acting like it by learning to use our words instead of our fists.
@blip15 ай бұрын
We need more James Schlesingers. Dude knew how to stay toe to toe with the Russians.
@TheWil3242 жыл бұрын
We’re so close to this becoming a reality.
@gozorak2 жыл бұрын
actually no
@stab742 жыл бұрын
@@gozorak actually yes.
@edgarteran18942 жыл бұрын
Yes we came close but in Cuban crisis when the Soviet Union and USA went head on. Thank God Cool heads prevail.
@gozorak2 жыл бұрын
@@stab74 There is zero chance or possibility that Russia would launch a surprise first strike against the United States of the magnitude pondered in First Strike. That possibility did exist throughout the Cold War however.
@RideAcrossTheRiver2 жыл бұрын
@@gozorak If Putin uses a tactical nuke on Ukraine, the response may be a significant and even multi-national assault on Russia. How will Putin respond to a major counter-attack of conventional military?
@singalongwrudy86902 жыл бұрын
"You'll have to answer to the Coca Cola company mister..."
@sarahbryant87682 жыл бұрын
big chunks of this were used a few years later in the day after film.
@BAC-bm8em2 жыл бұрын
Brings back a lot of memories. USAF SAC MMS 1977-81
@patdbean6 ай бұрын
No mension at all of triden. In 1979 if i remember trident one was just starting tonenter service. Trident 2 was still iver a decade away.
@jeffreyjohnson98212 жыл бұрын
Tons of this footage was used in 1983s the day after
@ambush_akula52612 жыл бұрын
i didn't realise they used filming from first strike in the day after
@ohioc42432 жыл бұрын
They used a lot of footage from this in The Day After
@scottdoubleyou5632 жыл бұрын
Other way around. This documentary was produced in 1979. The Day After was produced and aired in 1983.
@ohioc42432 жыл бұрын
@@scottdoubleyou563 Right that's what I said....They used a lot of footage from this in The Day After.....
@scottdoubleyou5632 жыл бұрын
@@ohioc4243 My apology. I read it as "They used alot of footage from The Day After in this." Reading owns me today.
@ohioc42432 жыл бұрын
@@scottdoubleyou563 Happens to us all!!
@thomashenshallhydraxis6 ай бұрын
Yo! This is crazy. This movie was made years before I was born. I’ve lived with thought of nuclear war my entire life. It’s crazy to think about
@stevt1006 ай бұрын
I remember when my dad was stationed at Sembach Air Base in the late 60's and had drills. There was a big alert during the 6 day war in 67 in israel. I loved living at Sembach during that time.
@johnshields68522 жыл бұрын
In 1st grade in Boston in 1966 we'd pledge allegiance to the united states of America then we'd have a drill for incoming nuclear missiles from Russia, the alarm would ring and we'd get under our little wooden desks, because we were on the east coast we were told we'd be one of the first cities hit. Welcome to the world young man, I thought that desk is going to save me, no wonder I'm so sarcastic and jaded.😉
@bremnersghost9482 жыл бұрын
If you can get Fair Use, Would you please do 'Threads' It has to be the Best Cold War Movie ever made. Growing up in Cold War Yorkshire, It Terrified me as a Kid.
@DogeickBateman2 жыл бұрын
It's on YT already, just search it up
@himoffthequakeroatbox43202 жыл бұрын
Set in Sheffield to save money - no special effects needed for the scenes after the attack.
@richardfannin9652 Жыл бұрын
@@himoffthequakeroatbox4320 😆
@GoSlash272 жыл бұрын
This was a push- piece for the MX missile. MX actually turned out to be a failure.
@fishfoodie2 жыл бұрын
No MX worked just fine; the problem was the baseing plan. No-one wanted them in their Districts ! The Nuclear Age series had an episode about the debacle kzbin.info/www/bejne/iGTZdaCDbLyGfs0
@colinstewart14322 жыл бұрын
Too expensive
@jasoncarswell74582 жыл бұрын
MX would have been impressive, at least the equal of the Russian Satan missile, but we realized we didn't need it, as Russia was falling apart on it's own by this point. You wouldn't believe how many of their ICBM silos were inoperative, filled with water, and them hoping we wouldn't find out.
@MillerVanDotTV2 жыл бұрын
@@colinstewart1432 too effective and disruptive. Cost is an excuse given how we piss money away until we need an excuse
@jmccallion23942 жыл бұрын
Thought those days were history, but with mad Vlad now threating tactical, I'm not sure. Although, great to see the B52 still going nearly 70 years ! What a venerable workhouse!!
@sharkfintech58932 жыл бұрын
* workHORSE
@C3T1C6 ай бұрын
I like it how the day after used this as a source for filming.
@ericdbates2 жыл бұрын
@11:45. that’s awesome…and 42 years later the BUFF is still in service.
@zerofox15512 жыл бұрын
The 2nd F don't stand for fellow.😁
@studinthemaking2 жыл бұрын
They said it may go another 30 years from today.
@amkrause20042 жыл бұрын
Hell it will be at the B21's retirement ceremony in 2060
@lilblackduc73122 жыл бұрын
Grandfather never sleeps. 🇺🇸 😎👍☕
@T-luvs-Mary-n-Evi Жыл бұрын
🇺🇸 *@ LionHeart FilmWorks* 🇺🇸 *Great to see this docu-drama AGAIN!* *THE MAIN REASON we have strategic assets on bases around the world today, (from Westen Pacific and Indian Oceans to the Persian Gulf and Europe) is precisely due to the wisdom of Reagan Doctrine having weapons distributed globally (as Moscow and Bejing had these weapons globally), and for our foreign enemies to realize there will be no proximal region or alliances they can easily create or rebuild after their written First Strike doctrines and policies (i.e. the doctrine of current 9 member nation Russian/CIS including Russian Kaliningrad [heavily nuclear rearmed since 1998], and CCP, North Korea, Packistan, Iran)* *Long range planning within the Reagan Doctrine was particularly strategic in calling for moving strategic assets into the Central Southern Asian region -- Persian Gulf.* I remember when "First Strike" was first shown. The discussion is as critically important today as it was then, as Russia has largely rebuilt its nuclear weapons delivery systems, and actually recycled/remade its nuclear stockpiles. However, thanks in part to Clinton and Obama the Chinese, North Koreans, and Iran (Iran being Russian engineered since 1998) have been rapidly building nuclear weapons stockpiles and reinforced UFAC's to protect them. There are now even other "Outside Continental Russian/CIS battlespace" WMD sites in Syria (more than 24 sites in Syria alone), and in Egypt, Libya, Sudan, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Oman, Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, etc... US B-52's have been fully rebuilt and refitted since this documentary first came out. Now we are rebuilding the B-52's again, and with much stronger airframes/wings, jet engines (Rolls Royce), current Gen avionics, comms, targeting, new weapon systems, etc... Russia has also largely rebuilt its TU-160's and "Bears", so not just subs and silo based nukes. *However, the Socialist/Fascist/Sodomite left in America today is a much bigger threat to any existence of life and liberty in America going forward. The KGB acted redundantly to create massive moral decay (including the sexual revolution and sodomy), and to invade the seminaries with "Liberation theology", Social Justice, and Gorbachev's "Green Cross" GLOBAL WARMING UN AGENDA's from the 1960's to 1980's, and US leftist were their tools. Now we are going down hard from within as they wanted and sought. *Turns out nukes were not the biggest threat after all.* 🎚